Rescuers were trying Friday to free seven mine workers trapped after an accident in a coal-producing region in northern Mexico, authorities said.
Initial investigations suggest the collapse was due to a flood at the mine in the municipality of Muzquiz, the state of Coahuila’s labor department said.
“Some people who were working were trapped inside the mine,” it said in a statement.
Police and civil protection authorities were at the scene for the rescue effort, it added.
The National Guard said on Twitter its personnel “were deployed in the area to provide security and allow the rescue of trapped workers.”
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said he had sent personnel from the security, labor and civil protection ministries to the area.
“We are watching and in coordination with municipal and state authorities,” he tweeted. “We hope that the rescue is favorable for the families and for everyone.”
Coahuila, the country’s main coal-producing region, has seen a series of fatal mining accidents over the years.
The worst was an explosion that claimed 65 lives at the Pasta de Conchos mine in 2006.
The bodies of 63 of the miners are still at the site and the families have repeatedly appealed to the Mexican authorities to recover them.